Swim to Survive

The Society defines the minimum skills needed to survive an
unexpected fall into deep water. These are expressed in a skill
sequence in the Canadian Swim to Survive standard:

ROLL into deep water

TREAD water for one minute

SWIM 50 metres

Swim to Survive is aimed primarily at children, but people of
all ages should be able to perform the Society's Swim to Survive
standard.

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Why Swim to Survive?

Basic swimming ability is a fundamental requirement in any
meaningful attempt to eliminate drowning in Canada.

The Society believes swimming is a life skill that all children
need to learn, just like fire safety or street-proofing.

The Society estimates half of Canadian children never take
traditional swimming lessons - even though "swimming" is the second
most popular activity (after bicycling) in Canada among school-age
children between 5 and 12 years of age. The Lifesaving Society
wants to ensure every child has the basic skills to survive.

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Swim skills are not innate - they need to be taught - and all
children deserve the chance to learn.

Our research shows that most drownings occur close to safety.
If every child in Canada could pass our Swim to Survive standard,
it could reduce the number of drownings by half.

Isn't it just swimming lessons?

No. Swim to Survive is different than swimming lessons - and not
a replacement for them. Swim to Survive teaches just the essentials
needed to survive an unexpected fall into deep water - an important
first step to being safe around water.

The Lifesaving Society strongly encourages parents to enrol
their children in swimming lessons.

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What's the Swim to Survive Schools Program?

The Lifesaving Society aims to have every Grade 3 student in
Ontario achieve the Swim to Survive Standard. The Society has a
Swim to Survive school grant program to help make
this happen.

The board of education and pool owner/operators coordinate the
timing and logistics of getting the students from the school to the
pool.

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The pool facility arranges for the pool time and Swim to Survive
instructors. The school board arranges student transportation and
communication with parents. The Lifesaving Society supplies
instructor materials, teacher and parent materials and Swim to
Survive certificates.